The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Spotlight on Snitker

Time to judge Braves manager under the harsher glare of the postseason.

-

Whatever you believed about the helmsmansh­ip of Brian Snitker until today, it doesn’t really matter. Because it all changes next week. Everything beforehand has been the coming attraction­s. The main feature begins rolling Thursday.

The baseball lifer and the best company man the Braves have ever employed is about to embark, at the age of 62, on his first postseason as a major league manager. It is that point in a season when the quibbles that come and go with a manager’s handling of his rotation, his lineup, his bullpen become tirades. It just all matters exponentia­lly more.

For the first time Snitker’s work will undergo the kind of inspection on a cellular level that comes only in the postseason, when a single move might well spell the difference between an upgraded banner hanging on the SunTrust Park light standard and the sud-

den end of a season.

The next-level second-guessing begins now.

Caretaking a young, rebuilding team, Snitker has been one of the best stories of this season. His 40 years with the Braves had come with more than its share of slights, but he soldiered on. Then he stepped into the breach in May 2016, taking over a 9-28 team as the then-interim manager. And it turned out he was the perfect guy to provide a stable, hothouse environmen­t in which this version of the Braves could flourish.

Sure, he was subject to all the carping from the armchair managers that comes with the job. But nothing that stuck to him, so long as his team trended toward improvemen­t. Impression­s were almost as important as results.

Come the postseason, Snitker’s work will be subject to the kind of unblink- ing critical eye unlike anything he has dealt with before as a manager.

By all rights, Snitker should win National League manager of the year when the official announceme­nt comes Nov. 13 (one day after Ronald Acuna should win NL rookie of the year). He needs to be rewarded with a new Braves contract that doesn’t keep him dangling year-to-year, one that comes with a healthy raise. He’s making a reported $800,000 this year, the lowest figure among those managers still in postseason contention. Managers’ salaries have flattened out, but for comparison, Milwaukee’s Craig Counsell reportedly makes nearly twice as much ($1.5 million). Chicago’s Joe Madden leads the pack at $6 million a year.

Snitker has been the comfortabl­e fit for a team on the rise. What he shows in the playoffs will go a long way toward demonstrat­ing if he is the man to lead them moving forward, as they presumably are in more and more high-pressure games. Beliefs about managers are set in concrete in the postseason.

It’s not as if once the Braves hit the postseason, Snitker and his bench coach Walt Weiss are going to suddenly order their players to run the bases clockwise. The manager is not going to melt away in the seventh inning of a tie game. But that decision when to pull the starter and whom to pinch hit gets a whole lot more intense.

They used to be a playoff fixture. But it has been a minute since the Braves have been back — five years actually. There is so much intrigue around how they will react to the moment. And that includes the manager as much as any rookie at the top of the lineup.

 ?? DANIEL SHIREY / GETTY IMAGES ?? Braves manager Brian Snitker could face plenty of scrutiny starting next week when the playoffs begin. Snitker, who took over a 9-28 team in May of 2016, will be managing for the first time in the postseason.
DANIEL SHIREY / GETTY IMAGES Braves manager Brian Snitker could face plenty of scrutiny starting next week when the playoffs begin. Snitker, who took over a 9-28 team in May of 2016, will be managing for the first time in the postseason.
 ?? Steve Hummer ?? My Opinion
Steve Hummer My Opinion

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States